[Footnote 47: A mountainous region in the vicinity of Montenegro.]
[Footnote 45: See the similar beginning of “Hassan Aga,” p. 324 above.]
[Footnote 49: See an account of this remarkable custom, from the Abbate Fortia, in Wilkinson, II. p. 178 sq.]
[Footnote 59: This beautiful poem see in Vuk, III. p. 299 sq. Transl. by Talvi, II. p. 245.]
[Footnote 51: As the best illustration of this remark we recommend, among other examples, the poem on the death of Meho Orugditch, Vuk, III. p. 333 sq, Transl. by Talvi, II. p. 279 sq.]
[Footnote 52: From Czelakowsky’s Collection; see above, p. 216, n. 58.]
[Footnote 53: From Slowanske narodnj pjsne sebran. F.L. Czelakowskym, Prague 1822-27. The collection of Carniolan ballads by Achazel and Korytko, which appeared in 1839, we have not yet seen.]
[Footnote 54: From Rukopis Kralodworsky, etc. wydan od W. Hanky, Prague 1835, p. 106.]
[Footnote 55: Ibid. pp. 107 sq. 197 sq. 131 sq.]
[Footnote 56: Taken down by Vuk from the lips of a peasant girl.]
[Footnote 57: In the original, she was buried last week. The lover could hardly expect to find a new grave, if she had been buried long ago.]
[Footnote 58: All our Bohemian and Slovakian specimens are taken from Czelakowsky’s Collection, as we happened not to be in possession of Kollar’s and Erben’s later work of that kind. For the full title see p. 385, note.]
[Footnote 59: See above p. 297.]
[Footnote 60: Pjesni ludu Bialo Chrobatow, Mazurow i Russinow z nad Bugu zebr. przez K.W. Wojcickiego, i.e. Songs of the White Chrobatians, Masovians, and Russinians on the Bug, collected by K.W. Woicicki, Warsaw 1836. Vol. I. p. 85. See above, p. 297.]
[Footnote 61: We have also two most exquisite Lithuanian ballads which treat of the same subject; one of them being the lament of a fatherless boy.]
[Footnote 62: Pjesni ludu Polskiego w Galicyi zebr. Zegoia Pauli, Lemberg 1838, p. 57. See above, p. 297.]
[Footnote 63: Pjesnicki hornich i delnich Luziskich Serbow, i.e., Songs of the Servians of Upper and Lower Lusatia, published by L. Haupt and J.E. Schmaler, Grimma 1844. Comp. p. 304, above.]
[Footnote 64: A similar naivete we find in a little Servian elegy. A poor girl sings: “Our Lord has of every thing his fill; but of poor people he seems to have greater plenty than of any thing else!”]
* * * * *
INDEX.
NAMES OF SLAVIC AUTHORS MENTIONED IN THE PRECEDING WORK.
A.
Achazel, 142, 335.
Aeneas, J. 190.
Albertrandy, 269.
Albertus, 131.
Albick, 181.
Alexeyef, 48.
Alipanof, 97.
Alter, 125.
Ambrosius, 200.
Anastasevitch, 85.
Appendini, 132.
Arsenief, 89, 91.
Augusta, Pileator, 190.
Augustini, 200.